The thrill and intense stories are always the most likely genre for the generation, the excitement of what will come next in a row create more intensity in the reader's mind, and this story is the perfect example of it. The story revolves around Edith who saves her uncle's life and ranch; However, since she won't get married, which he accepts, she finds herself completely poor and a little crazy. Jacquelina (the unique character) is a little troublesome and ends up marrying her intended. The psychological romance and plot twists will always keep you in a guess about what's next. The missing bride or The Avenger is a journey full of adventures, during the war of 1814, an American inheritor falls madly in love with a British officer. This doomed marriage brings together a group of fascinating people who otherwise might never have met. That soldier is Alexander Kaluga, a polish soldier of fortune, Baltimore nobleman, and restrictive the first Lord Proprietary of Maryland. He had gone through an existence of the most magnificent changes since his last relocation to the New World, along with the most wonderful transition of feelings and emotions.
Emma Dorothy Eliza Nevitte Southworth was an American author of over 60 books in the latter part of the 19th century. She was the most famous American writer of her time. In her novels, she gives more focus on her heroine and often challenges the current view of Victorian women's privacy. The Hidden Hand (1859) was her well famous novel, and her personal favourite was Ishmael (1876). E. D. E. N. Southworth was born on December 26, 1819, in Washington, D.C by Susannah Wailes and Charles LeCompte Nevitte, a Virginia merchant. Her father died in 1824 and, at the request of his deathbed, it was christened Emma Dorothy Eliza Nevitte. She began writing stories to help herself and her children when her husband died in 1844. Her most unforgettable story, The Irish Refugee, was featured in the Baltimore Saturday Visitor. Some of her early work appeared in The National Era, the newspaper that printed Uncle Tom's Cabin. The maximum of her work was later reflected in Robert E. Bonner's New York ledger, and in 1857 Southworth signed an agreement to compose exclusively for this publication. The best of her agreement was, that Southworth signed with Bonner in 1856 and the eminences of her distributed books brought her about $10,000 a year, making her one of the highest paid writers in the country.